This information applies to England, Wales and Northern Ireland
The first thing you need to do is decide how much you can afford. You will need to look at how much money you have available yourself and how much you can borrow. There are a number of different financial institutions which offer loans to people buying a property, for example, building societies and banks. You should find out if you are able to borrow money and if so, how much (for information on mortgages, see under heading Mortgages).
Some building societies now provide buyers with a certificate that states that a loan will be available provided the property is satisfactory. You may be able to get this certificate before you start looking for a property. Building societies state that this certificate may help you to have your offer accepted by the seller.
Before finally deciding how much to spend on a property, you need to be sure you will have enough money to pay for all the additional costs. These include:-
For more information about Stamp Duty Land Tax, go to the HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) website at
www.hmrc.gov.uk/so, or ring the HMRC Stamp Office enquiry line on: 0845 603 0135.
On some properties, where the seller has to provide a Home Information Pack (HIP), the seller will pay for local authority searches.
For more information about Home Information Packs in England and Wales, see Selling a home.
You should be aware that if you start the process of buying a property and then the sale falls through you may have already paid for a valuation and/or a survey. If the solicitor has started any legal work you may also have to pay for the work done.
You should also take into account the running expenses of the property you wish to buy. These may include:-
For more information energy efficiency certificates, see Selling a home.
You will have to pay a deposit on exchange of contracts a few weeks before the purchase is completed and the money is received from the mortgage lender. The deposit is often 10% of the purchase price of the home but it can vary.
There are a number of ways in which you could find a property to buy:-
When you find a property you should arrange to look round it to make sure it is what you will need and to get some idea of whether or not you will have to spend any additional money on the property, for example, for repairs or decoration. It is common for a potential buyer to visit a property two or three times before deciding to make an offer.
Ask for the Home Information Pack (HIP). This will give you important information about the property you're thinking of buying, including an energy performance certificate, local authority searches and evidence that the person selling the property is entitled to do so. From 1 May 2008, in England, the HIPs of newly-built properties must also contain a sustainability certificate.
For more information about Home Improvement Packs, see Selling a home.
If the property is a newly-built property, check whether it has a Buildmark warranty. Buildmark warranties are organised by the National House-Building Council (NHBC) which is an independent organisation with over 20,000 builders of new houses on its register. Before being accepted onto the NHBC register, builders must be able to show that they are technically and financially competent and they must also agree to keep to NHBC Standards.
The Buildmark scheme covers homes built by NHBC registered builders once the NHBC has certified them as finished. The scheme will, for example, protect your money if the builder goes bankrupt after contracts have been exchanged but before completion. It also covers defects which arise because the builder has not kept to NHBC Standards. For more information, go to the NHBC website at:
www.nhbc.co.uk.
If the property is freehold, this means that the land on which the property is built is part of the sale and no ground rent or service charge is payable.
A property may be leasehold, which means that the land on which the property is built is not part of the sale. You have to pay ground rent to the owner of the land - who is called the freeholder.
The length of a lease can vary and you should check that the length of the lease on the property you are interested in buying is acceptable to the mortgage lender. You should consult an experienced adviser, for example, at a Citizens Advice Bureau. To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that can give advice by e-mail, click on
nearest CAB.
In addition to ground rent on a leasehold property, you may have to pay an annual service charge. This usually happens with a flat. The service charge covers such items as maintenance and repairs to the buildings, cleaning of common parts and looking after the grounds.
A group of leaseholders living in the same building may have a right to jointly buy the freehold of the building or take over its management.
In England and Wales, you can get further advice about leasehold from:-
The Leasehold Advisory Service (LEASE)
31 Worship Street
London
EC2A 2DX
Tel: 020 7374 5380 Or 0845 345 1993 (9.30am to 3.30pm Monday to Friday)
Fax: 020 7374 5373
E-mail: info@lease-advice.org.uk
Website:
www.lease-advice.org.uk
There is also a useful leaflet on leasehold rights in England and Wales. Go to the website of the Communities and Local Government Department at:
www.communities.gov.uk.
To get the leaflet in different languages and different formats, email alternativeformats@communities.gsi.gov.uk.
If the property is commonhold, this means that you can buy the freehold of a flat and own common parts of the building jointly with the owners of other flats in the building (known as a commonhold association).
In commonhold a ground rent or service charge is not payable. However, a share of the commonhold association's expenditure on maintenance, insurance and administration will be payable for the common parts of the building.
Further information about commonhold is available from LEASE – see above under leasehold property for details.
When you decide you would like to buy a particular property you do not necessarily have to pay the price being asked for it by the owners. You can offer less if, for example, you thinks there are repairs to be done which will cost money.
If the property is being sold through an estate agent, you should tell the estate agent what you are prepared to pay for the property. The estate agent will then put this offer to the owners.
If the owners do not accept the first offer put to them by you, you can decide to make an increased offer. There is no limit on the number of times you can make offers on a property. If you make a written offer it will always be made subject to contract. This means that you will not be committed to the purchase before finding out more about the state of the property. If you make an oral offer this is never legally binding.
Can a seller refuse to accept my offer just because I'm a Muslim?
Someone who sells a property directly to you, without going through an estate agent, can decide they don't want to sell to you because you are a Muslim. However, if someone uses an estate agent to sell the property, they can't refuse your offer just because you're a Muslim, or discriminate against you for any other reason.
When your offer for the property has been accepted you will have to consider the following:-
Once the owners have accepted your offer the buyer may be asked to pay a small deposit to the estate agent. This is usually between £500 and £1000. It is meant to show that you are serious about going ahead with the purchase. It is repayable if the sale does not go ahead.
If you have not already begun to arrange a mortgage, you should start to do this now. It should take about three weeks from the application for the mortgage to the formal offer being made by the lender. However, this time-scale may vary.
Whoever agrees to lend the money will want to have the property valued. This is to make sure that the lender could get the loan back if for any reason you stopped paying your mortgage and the house had to be sold again. The valuation will be done by a surveyor on behalf of the lender but you will have to pay for this valuation. The fee will be payable in advance, usually when the you send a completed mortgage application form to the lender.
If the amount of money to be borrowed is more than a certain percentage of the valuation of the property (usually 75-80%), your lender may make it a condition of the loan that you take out extra insurance to cover the extra amount. You pay a single premium to your lender which is usually added to the loan. This is known as a higher lending charge (or mortgage indemnity guarantee).
I am pregnant and have just applied for a mortgage. It has been turned down because they say I won't be returning to work after the baby is born. Are they allowed to do this?
A mortgage lender doesn't have to give you a mortgage. However, they must not refuse to lend you a mortgage, or treat you less favourably than other people, simply because of your race, sex, disability, religion or sexuality.
The mortgage lender is not allowed to turn down your application on the grounds of pregnancy. This is sex discrimination and it is against the law. Get advice from an experienced adviser about what to do.
The valuation which is done for whoever is lending the money is not a survey. You should consider whether or not to have an independent survey carried out in addition to the valuation. The survey would not only consider the value of the property but would also examine the structure of the property and should identify any existing or potential problems.
There are two levels of survey that you can choose between:-
It is possible for you to use the same surveyor who does the valuation to carry out the survey and this may be cheaper. However, you can use a different surveyor if you wish.
If the surveyor reports that there are some problems with the property, you will have to consider whether you still want to go ahead with the purchase or want to negotiate further with the seller about the price. The surveyor will usually advise you as to how any problems they have identified should be dealt with and the likely costs of this. You can find more useful information about property surveys at
www.rics.org/Property/ResidentialProperty.
The legal process of transferring the ownership of the property from the present owner to the buyer is known as conveyancing. You should decide who you want to do the conveyancing work. You can do it yourself – although this can be complicated – or you can:-
Most firms of solicitors offer a conveyancing service. Although all solicitors can legally do conveyancing, it is advisable to choose a solicitor who has experience of this work.
For information on choosing a solicitor, see Using a solicitor.
You can use a licensed conveyancer to do your conveyancing. Licensed conveyancers are not solicitors but are licensed by the Council for Licensed Conveyancers.
If you want to find out if a local conveyancer is licensed you can write to:
The Council for Licensed Conveyancers
16 Glebe Road
Chelmsford
Essex CM1 1QG
Tel: 01245 349599
Fax: 01245 341300
E-mail: clc@clc-uk.org
Website:
www.conveyancer.org.uk
Before making a choice as to who will do the conveyancing, you should be advised to find out the probable costs of the conveyancing. It is important to contact more than one solicitor or licensed conveyancer as there is no set scale of fees for conveyancing. You should:-
You may choose to buy your property jointly with someone else, such as your husband, wife, civil partner, partner, relative or friend.
If you buy your property with someone else, you can choose to do this in one of two ways, as either:
This is the case whether you own the freehold or leasehold of the property.
If you are thinking about buying a property with someone else, you should get legal advice on the best type of ownership for you.
If you own your property as a beneficial joint tenant, this means that it belongs to you and the other owner(s) jointly. You can't re-mortgage or sell the property without the agreement of all the other owner(s). However if there is a dispute, an owner can apply for a court order.
As a beneficial joint tenant, you don't own specific shares in the property and you can't give away a share of the property in a will. If you die, your interest in the property passes automatically to the other owner(s).
If you own your property as tenants in common, this means that it belongs to you and the other owner(s)jointly, but that you all also own a specific share of its value. It is up to you to decide how much each share will be.
You can give away, sell or mortgage your share. If you die, your share of the property does not pass automatically to the other owner(s). You can leave your share to whoever you like in your will.
For more information about owning your property jointly, see the Land Registry leaflet
Joint Property Ownership.
Although it is impossible to give a precise idea of how long the legal work involved in buying a property takes, it is possible to offer guidelines. From having an offer accepted to exchange of contracts can take up to seven weeks and from exchange of contracts to completion can take up to four weeks. However, if there are any problems the time taken may be longer.
Once you have instructed the solicitor or, in England and Wales, a conveyancer, the seller’s solicitor or the licensed conveyancer draws up a contract which will eventually be signed by you and the seller. However, before the contract can be signed, your solicitor or licensed conveyancer must make sure that there are no problems with the ownership of the property, rights of way, access, or future developments in the area that might affect the property. This is called ‘making enquiries and searches’. The solicitor or licensed conveyancer makes the enquiries and searches as follows:-
Whilst the solicitor or, in England and Wales, a licensed conveyancer is making the enquiries, you should sort out how you will pay the deposit that has to be made when the contracts are exchanged. This deposit is often 10% of the price of the home but it can vary.
If you are also selling a house, it is usually possible to put the deposit on the property being sold towards the deposit on the property you are buying.
If raising the deposit is a problem, you could consider borrowing the money for the deposit from relatives or you could try to get a bridging loan from a bank. However, the amount of interest you will have to pay for a bridging loan will be high and you should check how much this arrangement will cost. Discuss your options with your solicitor or licensed conveyancer.
You should make sure that buildings insurance is arranged from the date of exchange, because once contracts have been exchanged you are responsible for the property.
You may be able to get information on buildings insurance from your mortgage lender, solicitor or, in England and Wales, a licensed conveyancer.
To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that can give advice by email, click on
nearest CAB.
The final contract between you and the seller is prepared when:-
You and the seller each have a copy of the final contract which you must sign. These signed contracts are then exchanged. At exchange of contracts both you and the seller are legally bound by the contract and the sale of the house has to go ahead. If you drop out, you are likely to lose your deposit.
You should make arrangements for the supply of gas, electricity and telephone service and make sure that the seller is arranging for final meter readings to be made.
Completion of the purchase usually takes place about four weeks after exchange of contracts, although it can be earlier. On the day agreed for completion:-
The solicitor or licensed conveyancer (in England and Wales only) will usually send their account to you on, or soon after, the completion date.
As a public sector tenant you will probably have the right to buy if you are a secure tenant of:-
You have the right to buy if you have been a public sector tenant for at least two years. However, if your tenancy began on or after 18 January 2005 (in Northern Ireland, after 12 October 2004), you must have been a public sector tenant for at least five years.
As a tenant, you will not have the right to buy if you are:-
If you are not sure whether you have the right to buy, you should check with your landlord which category you fit into.
If you are a secure tenant of a local authority, you should be given written information to help you decide about the right to buy. You can also get this information from a government leaflet called
Your right to buy your home.
This leaflet is available in a number of different languages, including Urdu, Arabic, Gujerati, Bengali and Welsh.
You can also get it on audio tape or in Braille if you are disabled. To order a copy, email communities@twoten.com.
As a tenant with a right to buy, you will get a discount on the price of the property. If you live in a house the discount will be between 32% and 60%, depending on how long you have lived there. If you live in a flat, the discount will be between 44% and 70%, depending on how long you have lived there. The discount will not exceed the regional upper limits, which, in England and Wales, range from £16,000 to £38,000.
In Northern Ireland, if you have been a secure tenant for 5 years you will get a 20% discount, and a further 2% discount for every additional year you have been a secure tenant. The maximum discount you can get is £34,000.
If you exercise the right to buy and then sell the property within a certain period, you may have to repay some or all of the discount – check the rules with your local authority.
To find out more about how this might apply to you, see the government leaflet
Your right to buy your home, or get advice from an experienced adviser, for example, at a Citizens Advice Bureau. To search for details of your nearest CAB, including those that can give advice by email, click on
nearest CAB.
As a tenant who wants to exercise your right to buy, you should try to obtain a mortgage from a building society or high street bank. You could also contact a mortgage broker to see if they can arrange a mortgage.
However, if you cannot afford to buy the property outright you can still buy under the rent to mortgage scheme. Under this scheme you can buy a share of the property and make mortgage repayments on the amount you have borrowed for this. The landlord will retain ownership of the remaining share of the property.
In England and Wales, if you want to apply for the right to buy you should ask your landlord for the Right to Buy Claim Form (Form RTB1). In Northern Ireland, you should ask for a house sales application form. The landlord must provide it.
As a secure or assured tenant of a registered social landlord, for example, a housing association or a local housing company, you may have the right to buy your home under a different scheme called the ‘right to acquire’. The right to acquire only applies to a limited number of properties, for example, homes built with public funds on or after 1 April 1997.
For more information about the right to acquire, in England you should contact your landlord or the Homes and Communities Agency who can be contacted by phoning 0300 1234 500 or by visiting
www.homesandcommunities.co.uk. In Wales, you should contact the Welsh Assembly Government on telephone number 0845 010 3300 (English) or 0845 010 4400 (Welsh), or by visiting
www.new.wales.gov.uk.
Shared ownership schemes are intended to help people who cannot afford to buy a suitable home in any other way. You share ownership of a property with a local authority or housing association. You pay rent to the local authority or housing association for part of the property and a mortgage on the rest. You will usually be able to buy further shares in the property at a later date.
To qualify for the scheme you must usually be a first time buyer, and priority is given to local authority or housing association tenants. Other people in housing need may also be considered for the scheme. You must be able to get your own mortgage to meet the purchase costs on a percentage of the property.
In Northern Ireland, the Northern Ireland Co-Ownership Housing Association runs a similar scheme, called the co-ownership scheme.
More information about shared ownership is available from the Homes and Communities Agency, local authorities or housing associations.You can contact the Homes and Communities Agency on 0300 1234 500 or visit their website at:
www.homesandcommunities.co.uk.
For more information about shared ownership schemes, including HomeBuy in England, Homeswithinreach in Wales and Co-Ownership in Northern Ireland, see Finding accommodation.
If you wish to buy a home you may be able to borrow money to do this. This is called a mortgage. The loan is for a fixed period, called a term and you have to pay interest on the loan. If you do not keep up the agreed repayments, the lender can take possession of the property.
There are several types of mortgage available. The most common ones are described below:
This is a mortgage in which the capital borrowed is repaid gradually over the period of the loan. The capital is paid in monthly instalments together with an amount of interest. The amount of capital which is repaid gradually increases over the years while the amount of interest goes down.
With this type of mortgage, you pay interest on the loan in monthly instalments to the lender. Instead of repaying the loan each month, you pay into a long-term investment or savings plan which should grow enough to clear the loan at the end of the mortgage term. However, if it doesn't grow as planned, you will have a shortfall and you will need to think about ways of making this up.
There are three main types of interest-only mortgages. These are:
With an Islamic mortgage, none of the monthly payments includes interest. Instead, the lender makes a charge for lending you the capital to buy your property which can be recovered in one of a number of different ways, for example, by charging you rent.
A mortgage could be available from a number of different sources. Some of the available options are:-
For some groups of people, such as first-time buyers and key workers, it may also be possible to borrow some of the money you need to buy a home from other, government-backed sources. You will usually need to borrow the rest of the money from a normal mortgage lender such as a bank or building society.
For more information about government-backed schemes to help you buy your own home, in England see HomeBuy in Finding accommodation and, in Wales, see HomeswithinReach in Finding accommodation.
As well as standard mortgage deals, lenders might also offer deals which are especially designed for people who don't qualify for a standard mortgage.
This type of deal is known as a 'sub prime' or adverse credit' mortgage. They are aimed at people who have had financial difficulties or credit problems in the past. For example, you might have had a previous home repossessed, have a County Court Judgment (CCJ) or have been declared bankrupt. You might also have difficulty in proving that you have a regular or reliable income.
Sub prime and adverse credit mortgages usually charge a higher rate of interest than standard mortgages. Lenders may also limit the amount of money they are prepared to lend you.
Before taking out a sub prime or adverse credit mortgage, you should get some independent financial advice.
If you're thinking about taking out a mortgage you should make sure you look into all the different options available, and that you only borrow what can afford to pay back. If you do not keep up the agreed repayments, the lender can take possession of the property.
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) has produced a helpful guide to mortgages called 'No selling. No jargon. Just the facts about mortgages'. You can view the guide on the FSA's Moneymadeclear website at:
www.moneymadeclear.fsa.gov.uk.
If in doubt, you may want to consult an independent financial adviser. For help with finding a financial adviser, visit the FSA's website at:
www.moneymadeclear.fsa.gov.uk.
Instead of going directly to a lender such as a building society for a mortgage, a broker could be used. A broker may be an estate agent, or a mortgage or insurance broker. They will act as an agent to introduce people to a source of mortgage loan to help them buy a home.
A broker may be used when it could be difficult obtaining a mortgage directly from a lender, for example:-
There are rules about how much a broker can charge for their services. Also, brokers must not discriminate against you because of your race, sex, disability, religion or sexuality when they are offering you their services.
For more information about mortgage brokers, go to the Financial Services Authority (FSA) website at:
www.moneymadeclear.fsa.gov.uk.
If you want to complain about a mortgage lender or broker, you should first discuss the problem with them, and then consider making a formal complaint. If you think the mortgage lender or broker has discriminated against you, you can complain about this as well. Each lender or broker should have its own internal complaints procedure. If you have followed this procedure and are still not satisfied, you can take your complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service. The contact details are:-
Financial Ombudsman Service
South Quay Plaza
183 Marsh Wall
London
E14 9SR
Tel: 0845 080 1800
Fax: 020 7964 1001
Email: complaint.info@financial-ombudsman.org.uk
Website:
www.financial-ombudsman.org.uk